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Eight levels of analytics

Eight levels of analytics

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 29 Oct 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

You may have two, three or even four levels of analytics at your business. But are you using the ones that really matter? SAS outlines the eight levels of analytics at an invitation-only event in Vegas

1) Standard reports

Standard reports provide summary statistics and answer questions like “What happened?” and “When did it happen?” said Davis. “That’s analytics, but not enough.”  

2) Ad hoc reports

Ad hoc reports answer questions like, “How many? How often? Where?” he said. They provide a level of independence on desktops that allow an individual, for example, to see sales in a particular region or at a particular point in time without needing to go to an IT governance counsel and wait three months for the result. 

3) Query drill-downs

Also referred to as OLAP, query drill-downs answer questions like, “Where exactly is the problem?” and “How do I find the answers?” said Davis. This is for when an organization wants to see not only the results, but what the results mean and what backs it up, he explained.

4) Alerts

Alerts answer questionas like, “When should I react?” and “What actions are needed now?” said Davis. “This is when you reach a particular threshold … something changes from green to red, so you do something about it.”

5) Statistical analysis

Statistical analysis answers the questions, “Why is this happening?” and “What opportunities am I missing?” he said. “You begin to take the data … and you begin to understand why things are happening.”

6) Forecasting

A popular level, forecasting answers questions like, “What if these trends continue? How much is needed? When will it be needed?” he said.  

7) Predictive modeling

Predictive modeling tells users what will happen next and how it will affect the business, Davis said.

8) Optimization

Optimization answers the questions, “How do we do things better?" and "What is the best decision for a complex problem?” said Davis. This includes areas such as price optimization, markdown optimization and size optimization. This isn’t just about cost-cutting and can be the difference between success and failure for an organization, he noted. 










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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.
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